
Key Points
- China tightened scrutiny of illegal cross-border securities trading and offshore account controls for Mainland investors.
- Existing accounts and assets appear unaffected, with impact focused on new client acquisition and inflows.
- HK financial stocks sold off, but bond weakness was mainly from higher UST yields.
- StanChart and HSBC may potentially see slower wealth NNM, but credit profiles remain solid.
- FWD’s risk is indirect, through potential slower Hong Kong insurance sales rather than immediate profitability pressure.
China tightens cross-border investment activity
On 22 May, Mainland Chinese regulator CSRC announced it was launching a clean-up of illegal cross-border securities trading activities. On the same day, Hong Kong regulator SFC published a circular, setting out additional measures for Mainland Chinese investors opening and maintaining investment accounts in Hong Kong.
Around 3 June - 4 June, various news outlets (including SCMP) reported that Mainland Chinese residents were facing greater challenges opening offshore accounts at major Hong Kong banks. There was, therefore, some concern that the initial crackdown on brokers was spreading to other financials.
Share prices of several Hong Kong banks and insurers sold off around 4 June and 5 June after this latest news headline (Table 1). Bond prices for these issuers did fall slightly, but we attribute this more to higher benchmark (UST) yields rather than any significant spread widening.
We summarise our take on various Hong Kong banks and insurers from a credit perspective. As a whole, we maintain our prior recommendations – this development should not materially impair these issuers’ credit qualities.
Table 1: Stock price changes from 22 May to 11 June
| Stock Price (HKD) | HSBC | Standard Chartered | Bank of East Asia | AIA | Prudential | FWD Group |
| 22 May (Fri) [A] | 143.9 | 204.0 | 14.1 | 86.1 | 119.5 | 30.0 |
| 29 May (Fri) [B] | 145.1 | 206.6 | 13.6 | 82.3 | 113.4 | 30.2 |
| 5 Jun (Fri) [C] | 141.8 | 201.4 | 13.6 | 74.0 | 101.1 | 29.1 |
| 11 Jun (Thurs) [D] | 138.5 | 193.2 | 13.1 | 73.8 | 100.3 | 30.9 |
| Stock Perf from 22 May - 29 May | 0.8% | 1.3% | -3.5% | -4.4% | -5.1% | 0.5% |
| Stock Perf from 29 May - 5 Jun | -2.3% | -2.5% | -0.4% | -10.0% | -10.8% | -3.6% |
| Stock Perf from 5 Jun - 11 Jun | -2.3% | -4.1% | -3.3% | -0.3% | -0.8% | 6.3% |
| Stock Perf since 22 May [D / A] | -3.8% | -5.3% | -7.1% | -14.3% | -16.1% | 2.9% |
| Source: Bloomberg, iFAST compilations, iFAST estimates. Data as of 11 Jun 2026. | ||||||
About the recent regulatory announcements
The focus of regulators appears to be on offshore investments, rather than a broad-based crackdown on all offshore monies. Specifically, there was no mention of insurance policies held by Mainland Chinese visitors in Hong Kong.
Furthermore, the SFC’s circular appears to focus more on tightening controls on account opening and ongoing investments. Importantly, the CSRC explicitly stated that existing accounts would not be forcibly closed, nor would existing assets be subject to any mandatory cleanup or forced sales. The main effect would therefore not be on existing clients, but rather on new client acquisition amid tighter controls on account opening.
Standard Chartered plc (STANLN)
As mentioned above, we expect the main effect will be on new client acquisition and net new money (NNM) inflows, and less so on existing assets under management (AUM). Standard Chartered (StanChart) is slightly exposed as the new measures relate to investment products, areas which overlap with its affluent banking and wealth-management franchise.
In FY25, StanChart’s Wealth Solutions operating income rose 24% y/y to $3,086m. This momentum continued into 1Q26 (+32% y/y), with Wealth Solutions income rising 32% y/y to a record quarterly $1,043m. Wealth Solutions is one of StanChart’s key growth engines, accounting for around half of the group’s FY25 operating income growth by dollar value.
This growth has been supported by strong NNM inflows into StanChart’s wealth franchise. Management reported $52b in affluent NNM in FY25, supported by strong new client acquisition (275k affluent new-to-bank clients). This momentum persisted into 1Q26, with another $18b of affluent NNM inflows.
Charts from StanChart’s recent May 2026 investor deck indicate ‘Global Chinese’ clients account for roughly one-third of group affluent NNM, implying around $17b of ‘Global Chinese’ affluent NNM. Assuming a 10% dip in this NNM due to new regulations (i.e. $1.7b), and a 70 bps revenue yield (based on FY25 Wealth Solutions revenue of $3,086m divided by affluent AUM of $447,219m), this would translate to about a $10m - 20m effect on StanChart’s top-line, small relative to StanChart’s FY25’s operating income of $20,942m.
In a worst-case scenario where client acquisition and NNM inflows slow down significantly, beyond the 10% assumption above, we expect the impact would be limited to roughly 1% - 2% on group revenues. Even in such a scenario, we expect StanChart to remain profitable in most of its key operating segments. Furthermore, from a bondholder's perspective, StanChart maintains a solid capital position, which should not be eroded by this headline.
Bottom line: We maintain our thesis that StanChart should remain solid with a strong credit profile. The key risk we will be monitoring is whether NNM flows and new client acquisition, especially from Mainland-linked clients, slow down significantly and begin to weigh on Wealth Solutions' growth.
Table 2: Selected Standard Chartered bonds (USD)
| Bond Name | Reset / Maturity Date (Years to Reset / Maturity) |
Ask Price | Yield to Worst (%) | Credit Rating (S&P / Moody's / Fitch) | Seniority |
| STANLN 7.767% 16Nov2028 Corp (USD) | 16 Nov 2027 / 16 Nov 2028 (1.4 / 2.4) |
104.33 | 4.58% | BBB+ / A3 / A | Senior Unsecured |
| STANLN 7.018% 08Feb2030 Corp (USD) | 08 Feb
2029 / 08 Feb 2030 (2.7 / 3.7) |
105.35 | 4.84% | BBB+ / A3 / A | Senior Unsecured |
| STANLN 5.005% 15Oct2030 Corp (USD) | 15 Oct 2029 / 15 Oct 2030 (3.3 / 4.3) |
100.52 | 4.83% | BBB+ / A3 / A | Senior Unsecured |
| STANLN 6.296% 06Jul2034 Corp (USD) | 06 Jul
2033 / 06 Jul 2034 (7.1 / 8.1) |
105.92 | 5.28% | BBB+ / A3 / A | Senior Unsecured |
| STANLN 6.097% 11Jan2035 Corp (USD) | 11 Jan 2034 / 11 Jan 2035 (7.6 / 8.6) |
104.33 | 5.39% | BBB+ / A3 / A | Senior Unsecured |
| STANLN 5.400% 12Aug2036 Corp (USD) | 12 Aug
2035 / 12 Aug 2036 (9.2 / 10.2) |
99.52 | 5.43% | BBB+ / A3 / A | Senior Unsecured |
| STANLN 4.300% 19Feb2027 Corp (USD) | - / 19 Feb 2027 (- / 0.7) |
99.88 | 4.47% | BBB / Baa2 / BBB+ | Tier 2 Subordinated |
| STANLN 3.265% 18Feb2036 Corp (USD) | 18 Feb
2031 / 18 Feb 2036 (4.7 / 9.7) |
91.81 | 5.26% | BBB / Baa2 / BBB+ | Tier 2 Subordinated |
| STANLN 5.300% 09Jan2043 Corp (USD) | - / 09 Jan 2043 (- / 16.6) |
93.04 | 5.97% | BBB / Baa2 / BBB+ | Tier 2 Subordinated |
| STANLN 5.700% 26Mar2044 Corp (USD) | - / 26 Mar
2044 (- / 17.8) |
97.29 | 5.95% | BBB / Baa2 / BBB+ | Tier 2 Subordinated |
| Source: Bloomberg, Bondsupermart, iFAST compilations. Data as of 11 Jun 2026. | |||||
HSBC Holdings plc (HSBC)
Meanwhile, HSBC may also be affected by these rules primarily through new client acquisition and NNM inflows. Similar to StanChart, HSBC has several segments which might be affected, including its Hong Kong business and its Wealth franchise.
In FY25, HSBC’s Wealth fees and other income rose 24% y/y to $9,390m. Of this figure, $2,206m was attributed to Hong Kong (+40% y/y), from investment distribution. Wealth continued to be a strong growth driver in 1Q26, with group-level income up 15% y/y to $2,697m, and Hong Kong Wealth income also up 24% y/y to $673m. As with the case for StanChart, this momentum was supported by strong NNM inflows, with $86b on a group level in FY25 and $39b in 1Q26 (no breakdown for Hong Kong).
While HSBC does not reveal a breakdown of ‘Global Chinese’ exposure like StanChart, management has repeatedly mentioned that non-residents continue to be an important growth driver in its Hong Kong segment.
We therefore do not have a numerical estimate for how these new regulations may affect HSBC’s top and bottom lines. Our base case is similar to that for StanChart – a possibly small impact on top-line figures. Bondholders can continue expecting HSBC to deliver continued profitability with a solid capital position.
Bottom line: Similar to the case for StanChart, HSBC is expected to remain solid with a strong credit profile. We will also be monitoring its NNM trends in the coming quarters.
Table 3: Selected HSBC bonds (USD)
| Bond Name | Reset / Maturity Date (Years to Reset / Maturity) |
Ask Price | Yield to Worst (%) | Credit Rating (S&P / Moody's / Fitch) | Seniority |
| HSBC 4.583% 19Jun2029 Corp (USD) | 19 Jun 2028 / 19 Jun 2029 (2.0 / 3.0) |
99.77 | 4.71% | A- / A3 / A+ | Senior Unsecured |
| HSBC 5.546% 04Mar2030 Corp (USD) | 04 Mar
2029 / 04 Mar 2030 (2.7 / 3.7) |
101.96 | 4.77% | A- / A3 / A+ | Senior Unsecured |
| HSBC 5.130% 03Mar2031 Corp (USD) | 03 Mar 2030 / 03 Mar 2031 (3.7 / 4.7) |
100.84 | 4.88% | A- / A3 / A+ | Senior Unsecured |
| HSBC 5.733% 17May2032 Corp (USD) | 17 May
2031 / 17 May 2032 (4.9 / 5.9) |
103.08 | 5.02% | A- / A3 / A+ | Senior Unsecured |
| HSBC 5.790% 13May2036 Corp (USD) | 13 May 2035 / 13 May 2036 (8.9 / 9.9) |
103.14 | 5.34% | A- / A3 / A+ | Senior Unsecured |
| HSBC 4.762% 29Mar2033 Corp (USD) | 29 Mar
2032 / 29 Mar 2033 (5.8 / 6.8) |
97.53 | 5.26% | BBB+ / Baa1 / A- | Tier 2 Subordinated |
| HSBC 8.113% 03Nov2033 Corp (USD) | 03 Nov 2032 / 03 Nov 2033 (6.4 / 7.4) |
114.85 | 5.34% | BBB+ / Baa1 / A- | Tier 2 Subordinated |
| HSBC 6.547% 20Jun2034 Corp (USD) | 20 Jun
2033 / 20 Jun 2034 (7.0 / 8.0) |
106.24 | 5.46% | BBB+ / Baa1 / A- | Tier 2 Subordinated |
| HSBC 7.399% 13Nov2034 Corp (USD) | 13 Nov 2033 / 13 Nov 2034 (7.4 / 8.4) |
111.36 | 5.51% | BBB+ / Baa1 / A- | Tier 2 Subordinated |
| HSBC 5.741% 10Sep2036 Corp (USD) | 10 Sep
2035 / 10 Sep 2036 (9.3 / 10.3) |
100.59 | 5.65% | BBB+ / Baa1 / A- | Tier 2 Subordinated |
| Source: Bloomberg, Bondsupermart, iFAST compilations. Data as of 11 Jun 2026. | |||||
FWD Group Holdings Limited (FWDGHD)
In FY25, FWD’s Hong Kong & Macau segment generated $1,207m in new business sales, close to half of the group’s total new business sales of $2,446m. This represented a 51% y/y increase, making Hong Kong & Macau FWD’s fastest-growing segment by a considerable margin.
This trend was also reflected in new business value metrics. Hong Kong & Macau generated $478m in value of new business (VNB) and $684m in new business contractual service margin (CSM), making it the group’s largest contributor and key growth driver.
In 1Q26, new business sales growth in Hong Kong & Macau slowed to 1% y/y, although this was in line with prior guidance as growth normalised from a high base. Even so, Hong Kong & Macau remain one of FWD’s key segments.
In our view, the risk to FWD is indirect. The most plausible impact would be through slower new business growth if tighter source-of-funds checks weigh on Mainland visitor demand for Hong Kong insurance products. However, we do not expect a material disruption at this stage, as the new measures are primarily targeted at investments rather than insurance policies (though the impact on investment-linked products is undetermined). Even if new business slows, the impact would first appear in APE, VNB and new business CSM, before flowing through more gradually to operating profitability as CSM is released over time.
Bottom line: We maintain our thesis that FWD continues to deliver improving profitability at the group level, supported by a strong credit profile. The key risk we will be monitoring is whether new business growth persists in the coming reporting periods.
Table 4: Selected FWD bonds (USD)
| Bond Name | Reset / Maturity Date (Years to Reset / Maturity) |
Ask Price | Yield to Worst (%) | Credit Rating (S&P / Moody's / Fitch) | Seniority |
| FWDGHD 5.252% 22Sep2030 Corp (USD) | - / 22 Sep 2030 (- / 4.3) |
99.74 | 5.32% | - / Baa2 / BBB- | Subordinated |
| FWDGHD 7.635% 02Jul2031 Corp (USD) | - / 02 Jul
2031 (- / 5.1) |
109.26 | 5.51% | - / Baa2 / BBB- | Subordinated |
| FWDGHD 7.784% 06Dec2033 Corp (USD) | - / 06 Dec 2033 (- / 7.5) |
113.96 | 5.48% | - / Baa1 / BBB | Senior Unsecured |
| FWDGHD 5.836% 22Sep2035 Corp (USD) | - / 22 Sep
2035 (- / 9.3) |
100.17 | 5.81% | - / Baa2 / BBB- | Subordinated |
| Source: Bloomberg, Bondsupermart, iFAST compilations. Data as of 11 Jun 2026. | |||||
Declaration: For specific disclosure, at the time of publication of this report, IFPL (via its connected and associated entities) holds positions in HSBC 5.546% 04Mar2030 Corp (USD), HSBC 5.741% 10Sep2036 Corp (USD), and STANLN 4.300% 19Feb2027 Corp (USD). The analyst who produced this report holds NIL positions in the abovementioned securities. This research report was prepared with the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) tools. iFAST Financial Pte Ltd does not rely exclusively on AI for content generation; the content of this report – including all investment theses, ratings, price targets and conclusions – has been independently reviewed and verified by the research analyst(s) to ensure accuracy and professional integrity.
